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Excitation of the Glashow resonance without neutrino beams

Published 3 Apr 2025 in hep-ph | (2504.02820v1)

Abstract: The $s$-channel process $\bar\nu_ee-\rightarrow W-$(on-shell) is now referred to as the Glashow resonance and being searched for at kilometer-scale neutrino ice/water detectors like IceCube, Baikal-GVD or KM3NeT. After over a decade of observations, IceCube has recorded only a few relevant neutrino events such that further exploration yet remains necessary for unambiguous confirmation of the existence of this resonant interaction. Meanwhile, its experimental discovery would provide an additional important test of the Standard Model. One might therefore ask: are there reactions with the Glashow resonance that would not necessitate having initial (anti)neutrino beams? This article suggests a surprisingly positive answer to the question $-$ namely, that the process may proceed in electron-positron collisions at accelerator energies, occurring as $e+e-\rightarrow W-\rho(770)+$. Although the resonance appears somewhat disguised, the underlying physics is transparent, quite resembling the well known radiative return: emission of $\rho+$ from the initial state converts the incident $e+$ into $\bar\nu_e$. Likewise, the CP conjugate channel, $\nu_e e+\rightarrow W+$, takes the form $e+e-\rightarrow W+\rho(770)-$. Similar reactions with muons are also possible. Within this viewpoint, future high-luminosity lepton colliders seem to be promising for excitation of the Glashow resonance in laboratory conditions.

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